Tuesday, April 30, 2013

New in Comics: J. Michael Straczynski's Ten Grand

A few choice selections from the comics due out May 1st (Note that the release dates are tentative on some of these titles):

Ten Grand #1
Image Comics

Description: Joe Fitzgerald was a mob enforcer until the day he met Laura, who convinced him to leave that world behind. Before quitting, Joe agreed to one last job, little realizing that the man he'd been sent to kill was deeply involved in demonlogy.

He survived Joe's attempt and came after him, fatally wounding Joe and killing Laura. As he lay dying, an angelic force (who may or may not be what she appears) pointed out that where she is going, he can't follow, and where he is going, he wouldn't want her to follow.

But if he will agree to work for them as a different kind of enforcer, they will bring him to life and keep on bringing him to life every time he is killed in a righteous cause. The reward: for those five minutes of death, he will be with Laura again.

Would you endure an eternity of pain and death, dying over and over, to be with the woman you love for just five minutes each time you died? Most people might say no. But Joe Fitzgerald isn't most people.

By: J. Michael Straczynski, Ben Templesmith


Black Bat #1
Dynamite Entertainment

Description: A classic pulp from the 30's returns in this modern take on a seminal character that inspired several well-known comic icons. Tony Quinn is a brash Defense Attorney to the mob who compromises his ethics for financial gain. When he refuses to cross the line and commit murder, he is tortured and blinded by his gangster employers. But when a fortuitous meeting with a covert agency gives him a chance to make amends, Tony transforms into the Black Bat and embarks on a redemptive quest to right the wrongs of his past.

By: Brian Buccellato, Ronan Cliquet


The Victories Transhuman #1
Dark Horse

Description: Super %$#@ed Up!

Following the Jackal's faceoff with Faustus and an attack on the US infrastructure, the Victories face a plague of new evils threatening their city. Who is trying to destroy our nation? Can the Victories overcome their own spiritual demons to keep the team together and save the world?

* Now an ongoing series!

"If you like Powers, you will love The Victories!"- Brian Michael Bendis

"One of the most anticipated comics of the year" -Comic Booked

By: Michael Avon Oeming, Nick Filardi


Suicide Risk #1
Boom! Studios

Description: Heroes are dying, and cops are dying twofold. Humanity is underpowered in the face of their onslaught, and people are suffering untold casualties trying to stem the flow.

After barely surviving a super-powered bank heist gone horribly wrong, beat cop Leo Winters vowed to try and find a way to stop them.

Following a lead, he discovered two lowlifes who seemed to be able to grant a person powers...for the right price. Thing is: you don't get to choose which power. It's seemingly random, a crap-shoot, a risk.

Will Leo decide to take that risk? And why is it that even the heroes in this world eventually break...bad?

By: Mike Carey, Elena Casagrande, Tommy Lee Edwards


The Wake #1 (of 10)
DC

Description: 'THERE'S SOMETHING DOWN THERE. . . '

When Marine Biologist Lee Archer is approached by the Department of Homeland Security for help with a new threat, she declines, but quickly realizes they won't take no for an answer. Soon she is plunging to the depths of the Arctic Circle to a secret, underwater oilrig where they've discovered something miraculous and terrifying. . .

Writer Scott Snyder (BATMAN, AMERICAN VAMPIRE) and artist Sean Murphy (PUNK ROCK JESUS) bring their acclaimed talents to this sci-fi/horror epic that explores the horrors of the deep, probes the origins of human history, and leaps far beyond to a frightening future.

By: Scott Snyder, Sean Murphy

More of This Week's Comics at This Link 

Monday, April 29, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Hannibal Suffers Big Drop, Has the Death Spiral Started?


NBC's late season entry Hannibal--based on the notorious serial killer from the books and movies--experienced a significant drop with its latest episode this past Thursday.  The show slipped to a 1.0 rating in the 18-49 demographic with 2.4 million total viewers.  The series had actually performed relatively well in its rather brutal Thursday 10 PM EST timeslot for its first couple of episodes, but then two weeks ago it dropped to a 1.4 rating and this last week it dropped even further.  With numbers like that, the future of this show is definitely in doubt now and I am raising its Cancellation Alert status to Medium.  If it can get back up to a 1.4 rating or higher, then I will ease off from that because those numbers might be good enough to keep it alive on ratings-challenged NBC, especially in that timeslot.  But if it stays in the 1.0 range, or drops further, I have a hard time seeing the network bringing this show back (and they really should move this one to Tuesday nights instead of Grimm to give it more of a chance).  Keep a close eye on the show's numbers the next two weeks because they will be crucial.  NBC announces their schedule for the upcoming season on the morning of May 13th, and they will have to have made a decision on Hannibal's future by that point.

Elsewhere on Thursday, Person of Interest also took a hit in the Nielsens as it only mustered a season low 2.4 rating in the 18-49 demo with 13.2 million total viewers.  I have to believe that was the ratings gods striking the show down after CBS put out a press release claiming Person of Interest to be a Top 5 show.  That was all just spin and I'm couldn't figure out what sort of math they were using to justify that statement--it's regularly in the Top 20, but has never made it to the Top 5 that I am aware of.  Over on The CW, Vampire Diaries was still flying low with a 1.0 rating and 2.2 million total viewers and Beauty and the Beast slipped to a 0.5 rating with 1.2 million total viewers (but it still got a renewal because it airs on the ratings-challenged fifth place network).

On Wednesday, Arrow and Supernatural returned up after two weeks of repeats. The former pulled a 1.0 rating with 3.1 million total viewers, and the later also had a 1.0 rating with 2.4 million total viewers.  On Friday, Nikita continued to barely register with a 0.3 rating and 1.2 million total viewers and Touch continued to fade with a 0.5 rating and 2.3 million total viewers.  Grimm slipped some as well, pulling a 1.3 rating with 4.9 million total viewers.

And for those few fans out there of cancelled shows Do No Harm and Zero Hour, their networks have announced the Summer burnoff runs for both of those.  The latter will begin airing out its episodes starting on Saturday June 15th at 8 PM EST, and the former will also run on Saturdays in the 10 PM EST hour starting June 29th.

Below are the full numbers from last week and I covered the Sunday/Monday shows in my mid-week column.  I also covered the renewal announcements of Revolution, Grimm, and Beauty and the Beast at this link.  And keep an eye on the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for the early returns from Sunday thru Monday shows from this week.  You can see the Cancellation Alert status of all the shows currently airing plus the final results from prior seasons at my Cancellation Watch page.  And for questions on how the ratings work and my Cancellation Alert statuses, you can see the Cancellation Watch FAQ.

Ratings Results for the Week of April 20:
Once Upon A Time (ABC Sun 8 PM) Rating: 2.1 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Moderate
Game of Thrones (HBO Sun 9 PM) Rating: 2.6 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
The Following (FOX Mon 9 PM) Rating: 2.4 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Defiance (Syfy Mon 9 PM) Rating: 0.8 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Low
Bates Motel (A&E Mon 10 PM) Rating: 1.3 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Revolution (NBC Mon 10 PM) Rating: 2.0 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Arrow (CW Wed 8 PM) Rating: 1.0 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Supernatural (CW Wed 9 PM) Rating: 1.0 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Vampire Diaries (CW Thu 8 PM) Rating: 1.0 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Person of Interest (CBS Thu 9 PM) Rating: 2.4 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Beauty and the Beast (CW Thu 9 PM) Rating: 0.5 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Hannibal (NBC Thu 10 PM) Rating: 1.0 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Medium
Nikita (CW Fri 8 PM) Rating: 0.3 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Moderate
Touch (FOX Fri 9 PM) Rating: 0.6 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: High
Grimm (NBC Fri 9 PM) Rating: 1.3 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed

Ratings Source: TV by the Numbers

Nielsen TV Ratings: ©2013 The Nielsen Company. All Rights Reserved.



Why Were They Cancelled? 
The Plight of Science Fiction and Fantasy Television in the Face of the Unforgiving Nielsens and Networks

Ever wondered why your favorite science fiction and/or fantasy show disappeared from the television schedule, never to deliver anymore new episodes? The reason why, most likely, is that it was cancelled because its ratings were low. And this book looks at those many cancelled sci fi/fantasy shows as well as the Neilsen ratings and television networks that dictate their fates. Available now for only $2.99 on Kindle from Amazon.com.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Revolution, Grimm, Beauty and the Beast Gets Renewed. Vampire Diaries Spin-Off The Originals Gets Ordered to Series

Friday afternoon was busy with series renewal announcements which included several genre shows that fans have been keeping a close eye on.  NBC announced renewals for both Revolution and Grimm, neither of which came as a big surprise.  The latter series has consistently performed well for a Friday show and has given the network an edge up on that low viewership night.  The former show has slipped notably from the ratings highs it enjoyed at the beginning of the season, but as I said previously, I have been assuming the odds were in its favor to get a second season renewal.  Both shows received full 22 episodes orders for their upcoming seasons which makes sense for Grimm but which I find a bit surprising for Revolution.  That show's ratings slide (and many of the comments I have seen on the social networks) suggest that fans have been abandoning ship on it and I would have thought that NBC would be more conservative with there renewal of that one.  It is basically in need of an overhaul and a major promotional push lest it go the same route as other two-season-and-out shows like V and Touch (yes, that one will get cancelled).  But then NBC can always renig on the full season order if Revolution gets off to a bad start in Season 2, so don't count those episodes as being in the bank just yet.  Grimm, on the other hand, likely has smooth sailing ahead of it and could quite possibly coast right into a fourth season.  Once a show gets through its third season then it is close to the 88 episode threshold that the syndication market looks for, so often networks just rubberstamp that fourth season unless the show experiences a drastic ratings tumble in year three (like, say, Nikita this season).  So expect Grimm to remain on the network's schedule for at least a couple more years.  No word from NBC yet on late season entry Hannibal, and seeing the ratings slide it experienced with its last episode it could officially be in trouble now.  But they should consider bringing it back next near and pairing it up with Grimm on Fridays to give the network a solid horror/supernatural block on that night.

Over at The CW, they decided to renew freshman series Beauty and the Beast even though that one has only averaged a paltry 0.6 rating in the 18-49 demographic during its first year.  Those are Syfy level numbers, but the fact is that one is actually the network's fourth highest rated scripted series which gives a pretty clear indication of how much The CW has struggled this year.  I really can't see how a broadcast network can keep going with the ratings it is pulling, but perhaps parent company CBS has decided it is worth propping it up for the time being.  Also announced is the Vampire Diaries spin-off series The Originals which will add yet another genre entry (though youth-skewing) to The CW's lineup.  How long it sticks around will likely depend on how much longer its network can remain viable.  The fact that there was no announcement concerning Nikita is not a particularly good sign for that one, but then there's a possibility it may get renewed as a Summer series or for a syndication run only to pad out its episodes and make it more attract to the syndication market especially overseas where it has performed quite well.

There are still six genre shows awaiting word on their fate, and you can read my predictions on those at this link.  And keep an eye on this site and the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for upcoming renewal/cancellation announcements as well as new series pickups from the broadcast networks.  The upfronts will begin on May 13th and that is when the schedules for the upcoming season will be finalized, so expect some more activity before then and especially on that week.

Ratings Source: TV by the Numbers

Nielsen TV Ratings: ©2013 The Nielsen Company. All Rights Reserved.



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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Revolution Still Dropping, How Far Can It Go? Plus, Defiance Slips With 2nd Episode


When NBC's Revolution started out the season, it was considered a huge ratings success and was touted as one of the early hits of the season.  But then science fiction fans have seen this several times over the last few years when broadcast network sci fi shows start strong only to head south on a death spiral that eventually leads to an early cancellation.  A few examples from the last few years: FlashForward, V, The Event, Touch, etc. (that last one's not cancelled yet, but it will be soon).  So what about Revolution, which has been on a mostly downward trend for some time now, especially since returning from its hiatus?  This last Monday's episode sunk to a new series low of a 2.0 rating in the 18-49 demographic (based on the final overnights) with 5.9 million total viewers.  That wasn't even enough to win its timeslot--which it usually does--with ABC's Castle beating it with a 2.3 rating and 11.8 million total viewers (nearly double the total viewers).  On top of that, Revolution lost over 50% of the audience from its lead-in The Voice.  So does all of this point to the end of the Revolution?

No, not yet.  Despite the slide from its once lofty ratings numbers, it still ranks as NBC's top rated scripted show based on season to date averages (which indicates how much that network is struggling apart from the three plus hours a week The Voice delivers).  I really think that at this point NBC will renew Revolution almost no matter how low it goes.  They can't cut loose their "hit new series" from this season without having to face down some major negative PR.  But as I have said before, they really need to retool this one next season (and kick in a major promo campaign) if they want it to reconnect with its audience and have any chance of the show making it to a third season.  And its numbers still haven't sunk to the lower levels of some of those shows mentioned above, so Revolution at least has that in its favor.

Also on Monday night, the second episode of Syfy's Defiance slipped some in the ratings from last week's debut.  The most recent airing pulled a 0.8 rating in the 18-49 demo and 2.4 million total viewers.  That drop is nothing to be alarmed about at this point, though the show has to hope it will stabilize its numbers soon.  I'm not certain if the typical 0.5 rating that Syfy's lower budget entries typically pull will be enough to keep this more expensive series going.  On FOX, The Following improved its numbers for the first time in a while as it rose to a 2.4 rating with 7 million total viewers.  And on A&E, Bates Motel also saw a lift as it pulled a 1.3 rating with 2.9 million total viewers.

On Sunday night, HBO's Game of Thrones continues to rule the evening as that one rose to a 2.6 rating in the 18-49 demo with 4.9 million total viewers.  That rating topped all cable shows and all broadcast network shows in Prime Time for the evening including ABC's Once Upon A Time which only mustered a 2.1 rating and 7.4 million total viewers for its first new episode in several weeks.

Keep an eye on the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for the early numbers for the rest of this week's shows, and you can see the Cancellation Alert status of all the shows currently airing plus the final results from prior seasons at my Cancellation Watch page.  And for questions on how the ratings work and my Cancellation Alert statuses, you can see the Cancellation Watch FAQ.

Ratings Source: TV by the Numbers

Nielsen TV Ratings: ©2013 The Nielsen Company. All Rights Reserved.



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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

New in Comics: Jupiters Legacy from Mark Millar and Frank Quietly

A few choice selections from the comics due out April 24th (Note that the release dates are tentative on some of these titles):

Jupiters Legacy #1
Image Comics

Description: The comic-book event of 2013 finally arrives as superstar creators MARK MILLAR and FRANK QUIETLY give us the superhero epic that all future comics will be measured by.

The world's greatest heroes have grown old and their legacy is a poisonous one to the children who will never live up to their remarkable parents. Unmissable.

By: Mark Millar, Frank Quitely


Amala's Blade #1
Dark Horse

Description: The kingdom of Naamaron is bitterly divided into warring factions: the low-tech Purifiers and the high-tech Modifiers. Both fear the great vizier's deadliest assassin, Amala. But for all her lethal skills, Amala's drawing too much attention for the vizier's taste. So what better way to deal with a troublesome cutthroat than to send her on a suicide mission?

* Nonstop, kickass fun!

* For fans of Avatar: The Last Airbender, Trigun, and Naruto.

By: Steve Horton, Michael Dialynas


Last Zombie The End #1 (of 5)
Antarctic Press

Description: The explosive final chapter begins!

In the aftermath of Before the After's shocking cliffhanger, the team are imprisoned by a brutal despot, the last surviving member of pre-apocalypse Chicago's notorious political machine. Warner faces torture, Planters is on the run, and time is running out for everyone_especially Ian, who is succumbing to the zombie virus raging through his veins. 26 pages of undeath-defying thrills!

By: Brian Keene, David Hutchinson


Rogues #1
Amigo Comics

Description: AMIGO debuts with the amazing art of the genius Juan José Ryp and the words of horror maestro El Torres. This is the tale of Bram and the Weasel, two reputed thieves in the slums of a fantasy world! After rescuing a girl from her wizard father, the two outlaws are cursed with the most horrible curse - for a thief!

By: Torres El, Juan Jose Ryp

More of This Week's Comics at This Link 

Monday, April 22, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Grimm Gets Moved to Coveted Tuesday Night Post-Voice Time Slot (but What About Hannibal?)


NBC's supernatural series Grimm--which has been performing well for a Friday series for two seasons now--got some promising news this last week when the network announced that they will move the show to the coveted 10 PM EST post-The Voice timeslot on Tuesdays beginning on April 30th.  Grimm (which was preempted this last Friday for news coverage) has performed consistently well on Friday nights since debuting there in October of 2011, averaging typically around a 1.5 rating in the 18-49 demographic; good numbers for that low viewership night.  But now, with underperforming new reality series Ready for Love getting pulled from the schedule, the network has decided to move Grimm into the slot following ratings juggernaut The Voice where it can potentially build on its audience.  It will remain there through its season finale with no word yet on whether it will return to Fridays for its third season (which has not been official announced, but you can count on it).  It will definitely be some good promotion for this sophomore series and it could help expand the cult following the show has attracted.  But I have to wonder why they didn't move new series Hannibal there instead.  That one currently resides in the brutal Thursday 10 PM EST timeslot and it has actually performed halfway decent there, but it could use any sort of scheduling love that the network would throw its way.  In fact, Hannibal actually slipped notably to a 1.4 rating in the 18-49 demographic this last week with 3.5 million total viewers.  So its early gains could be wiped out if it now starts to descend into a death spiral.  But if that one got moved to the Tuesday timeslot, the strong lead-in could keep it afloat through the rest of its freshman season.  Then next season, pair it up with similarly horror-themed Grimm on Fridays where that show has already developed a steady following.  I guess the network is rewarding Grimm for having done well this far, but then its not in any danger now and it seems like the wiser move would be to prop up high-profile series Hannibal at this point.  But then why do I try to make any sense of what the network execs do?  Look at this as a vote of confidence for Grimm, but also note that this could have been a missed opportunity to keep Hannibal alive (and he's not somebody you want to make mad . . . ).

On Thursday of last week, The CW's Vampire Diaries returned after two weeks of repeats to match a season low of a 1.0 rating in the 18-49 demo with 2.1 million total viewers.  Beauty and the Beast returned with its typically low 0.6 rating and 1.6 million total viewers.  That struggling network needs to rethink its late season strategy because it seems to do these repeat blocks every year and the numbers for its shows really fall off as the season winds down.  On Wednesday, Arrow and Supernatural were both in repeats with those returning to finish out there season this week.  Person of Interest was in repeats on CBS last week as well.

Below are the full numbers for the week and you can read about the Sunday through Monday shows (including the strong debut of Syfy's Defiance) in my mid-week column.  (And can see my final season predictions at this link.)  And keep an eye on the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for the early returns from Sunday thru Monday shows from this week.  You can see the Cancellation Alert status of all the shows currently airing plus the final results from prior seasons at my Cancellation Watch page.  And for questions on how the ratings work and my Cancellation Alert statuses, you can see the Cancellation Watch FAQ.

Ratings Results for the Week of April 14:
Once Upon A Time (R) (ABC Sun 8 PM) Rating: 1.4 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Moderate
Game of Thrones (HBO Sun 9 PM) Rating: 2.4 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
The Following (FOX Mon 9 PM) Rating: 2.1 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Defiance (Syfy Mon 9 PM) Rating: 1.0 | Trend: n/a | Cancellation Alert: Low
Bates Motel (A&E Mon 10 PM) Rating: 1.1 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Low
Revolution (NBC Mon 10 PM) Rating: Preempted | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Low
Arrow (R) (CW Wed 8 PM) Rating: 0.4 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Supernatural (R) (CW Wed 9 PM) Rating: 0.5 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Vampire Diaries (CW Thu 8 PM) Rating: 1.0 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Person of Interest (R) (CBS Thu 9 PM) Rating: 1.6 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Beauty and the Beast (CW Thu 9 PM) Rating: 0.6 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Medium
Hannibal (NBC Thu 10 PM) Rating: 1.4 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Moderate
Nikita (CW Fri 8 PM) Rating: Preempted | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Moderate
Touch (FOX Fri 9 PM) Rating: Preempted | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: High
Grimm (NBC Fri 9 PM) Rating: Preempted | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Low

Ratings Source: TV by the Numbers

Nielsen TV Ratings: ©2013 The Nielsen Company. All Rights Reserved.



Why Were They Cancelled? 
The Plight of Science Fiction and Fantasy Television in the Face of the Unforgiving Nielsens and Networks

Ever wondered why your favorite science fiction and/or fantasy show disappeared from the television schedule, never to deliver anymore new episodes? The reason why, most likely, is that it was cancelled because its ratings were low. And this book looks at those many cancelled sci fi/fantasy shows as well as the Neilsen ratings and television networks that dictate their fates. Available now for only $2.99 on Kindle from Amazon.com.

Friday, April 19, 2013

Kickstarter Fallout: Stargate, Farscape, Jericho, Terra Nova and Other Shows That Either Could or Most Certainly Could Not be Revived by Kickstarter

Last Month, Rob Thomas launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund a reunion movie for the TV series he created Veronica Mars (which starred Heroes' Kristen Bell).  That campaign was wildly successful and immediately sparked off all sorts of rumors as to which show would be the next to live on through this sort of effort.  I have already mulled over what a cancelled sci fi/fantasy series could expect from a similar campaign at this link and looked at some shows that have the potential to be brought back this way and some that will almost certainly not.  But then there's still plenty more shows to consider.  That fact is that the more recently a series was cancelled, the better the chances of it having a renewal through Kickstarter.  Any show over ten years old would be a stretch (even greater than it already is) of coming back through a crowd funded film, but then nothing's absolutely impossible.  Here's a look at several cancelled genre shows broken into the categories of Doable, Longshot, and Pipedream.

Doable: 
These are shows that could feasibly be revived for a Kickstarter funded movie because they wouldn't be too expensive or the creative talent behind the series would be pushing for them or there's no other plans in the works for the franchise or something along those lines.  The ones in this category that I already covered are Chuck, Pushing Daisies, Wonderfalls, and Legend of the Seeker.

Stargate (All Three Series): Stargate: SG-1 already produced two made for DVD movies and there were plans in the works for some Stargate: Atlantis films as well.  Plus, the creative talent behind Stargate: Universe tried to get that show moved to another network after Syfy cancelled it.  MGM probably wants to keep a tight grip on this franchise, but if fans want to throw money at a movie and someone like Brad Wright or Robert C. Cooper gets behind it, then it could happen.

The Secret Circle (The CW, 2011-12, Cancelled After One Season): This supernatural series never could take advantage of its Vampire Diaries lead-in and failed to develop a large audience.  But it did get a devoted if small fanbase who worked hard to keep it alive after The CW axed it last season.  The budgets for this show were likely on the low end, so a Kickstarter campaign could raise the needed funds to do a movie.

Middleman (ABC Family, 2008, Cancelled After One Season): This fun adaptation of the comic book of the same name could feasibly come back on the budget of a Kickstarter campaign, but it would take creator Javier Grillo-Marxuach getting behind it to happen.  But has this one faded too far from the memory of its fans?

Reaper (The CW, 2007-09, Cancelled After Two Seasons): This series couldn't have been too expensive to produce and it had a pretty devoted--though small--following back when it aired on the fifth place network.  Ray Wise has been pretty busy of late, though, and a revival would never fly without him onboard.

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Longshot:
These shows could potentially return with a Kickstarter revival but would have to overcome several hurdles such as budgetary constraints, prior commitments of cast and creative talent, other plans in the works by the studios, a lack of interest from fans, etc.

Farscape (Sci Fi Channel, 1999-2003, Cancelled After Five Seasons): Rockne S. O'Bannon has already said several times that he wants to revisit this universe and he was even trying to get a web series revival going a few years ago.  The biggest issues here are that it would be expensive to produce--probably well beyond the Kickstarter funding range--and he's currently busy with Defiance on Syfy.  But we can keep our fingers crossed that something new could emerge from this franchise in the near future.

Jericho (CBS, 2006-08, Cancelled After Two Seasons): It would be expensive to produce a Jericho reunion movie and series stars Skeet Ulrich and Lennie James currently have other commitments.  Plus, there are other plans potentially in the works to bring the show back possibly with Netflix (though that appears to have stalled).  But if the producers were to turn to Kickstarter to raise funds, I believe that fans would step up in a big way.

Babylon 5/Crusade: J. Michael Straczynski is known for being able to work within a budget and I'm sure he'd like to revisit his B5 universe at some point.  The original series wrapped up pretty much as he intended, but Crusade was cut short after half a season.  Plus his Legend of the Rangers series never went past the debut movie and his Lost Tales concept had plenty of potential as well.  But I'm thinking any sort of return to B5 would involve him working with the studio rather than exploring the crowd-funding route.

Jeremiah (Showtime, 2002-04, Cancelled After Two Seasons): And speaking of Mr. Straczynski, this post-apocalyptic series of his was cut short and still had plenty more stories to tell.  It could probably be brought back on an acceptable budget and the principal actors from the show don't have too many commitments that I am aware of at this time.  But then this one sadly never developed much of a following, so I don't know if a crowd-funding campaign this late in the game could generate enough interest to bring it back.

Alphas (Syfy, 2011-12, Cancelled After Five Season): Creator Zak Penn has hinted that he'd like to do the Kickstarter thing to revisit Alphas and possibly give it a decent wrap-up.  And I believe it would be doable financially (though on the high end of the crowd-funding range).  The biggest problem here is that I don't believe it would get enough fan support.  That show--even though it was quite decent--never seemed to attract much of a devoted fanbase.  So I don't see enough people coming together to raise the money that would be needed.  Quite a shame because the series ended on a very unsatisfying note.

Cult (The CW, 2013, Cancelled After Less Than One Season): This was a pretty decent show that was just cancelled recently and deserved much better than it got.  I'm sure that the final episode--whenever we get to see it--will not provide much of a resolution, so a wrap-up movie would be great and possibly financially doable.  Unfortunately, this show attracted so few viewers that I don't believe a Kickstarter campaign would attract much attention nor raise enough money.  And series creator Rockne S. O'Bannon is pretty busy these days and would probably rather focus on a Farscape revival as the top priority of any of his side projects.

Eureka (Syfy, 2006-12, Cancelled After Five Seasons): Fans of this show wanted more and I'm sure they would be willing to fork over some green for a reunion movie.  The biggest hurdle here, though, would be the cost.  If they could work out a deal where Kickstarter partially funded it, that might work, but otherwise I believe it would be out of reach of a solely crowd-funded effort.

The Tick (FOX, 2001-02, Cancelled After Half a Season): It's been well over ten years since this--one of the all-time great superhero parodies--was cancelled, but I bet they could bring the cast back together as aged version of their previous characters.  And a high-end crowd-funding campaign could probably raise enough money.  But then I just don't know that you could generate enough interest so long after the show was cancelled.

Journeyman (NBC, 2007, Cancelled After One Season): This time travel show garnered a small but loyal following during its brief run that would love to have a decent wrap up or at least one more visit with their favorite characters.  But it's six years gone and there just may not be enough interest to bring the show back.

Sanctuary (Syfy, 2008-11, Cancelled After Four Seasons): This one started out as a web series so the creators know how to work within a budget.  But then from what I understand the finale resolved most the show's storylines, so I'm not certain where else they had to go with this one.  But there was a fan effort to keep the series going so I'm sure they felt like this one had more story to tell.



Pipedream:
These are the shows that would be way too expensive and/or have far too many hurdles--such as studio control--to overcome in order to see a revival through Kickstarter.  The ones in this category that I already covered include Firefly, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Star Trek (any of the incarnations), Angel, The 4400, and Carnivale.

Terra Nova (FOX, 2011, Cancelled After One Season): The studio actually shopped this one around after FOX cancelled the series, but don't expect a Kickstarter revival.  It would be way too expensive as this one was known for having exceedingly high budgets.

Moonlight (CBS, 2007-08, Cancelled After One Season): This fan favorite vampire series from several years ago (far superior to True Blood and Vampire Diaries in my opinion) had followers organizing nationwide blood drives to convince CBS to renew it after they put a stake in it.  But series star Alex O'Loughlin is far too busy with Hawaii Five-0 and other projects these days and a revival would never fly without him onboard.

Dollhouse (FOX, 2009-10, Cancelled After Two Seasons): This one would probably be doable financially, and I'd love to see them carry on the "Epitaph" storyline that the show ended on (and that briefly lived on in comic book form).  But this was Joss Whedon's least popular series and is likely very low on his priority list.  If he does any side project during his spare time working on Marvel movies, it would almost certainly be Dr. Horrible 2.

Defying Gravity (ABC, 2009, Cancelled After One Season): This space exploration show never received the respect it deserved and many tuned out early thinking it was just Grey's Anatomy in space (in all fairness, series creator James D. Parriott did pitch it as such).  I'd love to see a continuation of the interesting storyline it was developing, but financially it's almost certainly out of reach of a Kickstarter campaign and I don't believe there would be enough fan interest to support it in the first place.

Heroes (NBC, 2006-10, Cancelled After Four Seasons): A revival of this one is in the works, but not through Kickstarter.  More on that at this link.

And here's a few others that you will almost certainly not see revived through a Kickstrater campaign for all of the reasons mentioned above and more: Threshold (CBS, 2005), FlashForward (ABC, 2009-10), V (ABC, 2009-11), The Event (NBC, 2010-11), No Ordinary Family (ABC, 2010-11), Caprica (2010-11)


Why Were They Cancelled? 
The Plight of Science Fiction and Fantasy Television in the Face of the Unforgiving Nielsens and Networks

Ever wondered why your favorite science fiction and/or fantasy show disappeared from the television schedule, never to deliver anymore new episodes? The reason why, most likely, is that it was cancelled because its ratings were low. And this book looks at those many cancelled sci fi/fantasy shows as well as the Neilsen ratings and television networks that dictate their fates. Available now for only $2.99 on Kindle from Amazon.com.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Defiance Starts Strong for Syfy but Game of Thrones Reigns Over All Genre Shows


It appears that Syfy may once again be embracing science fiction with shows like Defiance and some of the development projects that currently have in the works (more on that in an upcoming post), and the network has received some early rewards from this shift with the debut of the aforementioned series.  That one debuted on Monday night with a 1.0 rating in the 18-49 demographic and 2.7 million total viewers.  That's the highest debut for a scripted show on Syfy (or as it was previously known, the Sci Fi Channel) since Eureka in 2006.  And this definitely represents a strong start for Defiance which will hopefully encourage the network's return to more heavily science fiction oriented programming (as opposed to the "sci fi lite" trend they have taken of late with shows like Warehouse 13, Being Human, and Haven).  And even though a 1.0 rating is not a particularly earth shattering ratings number for a cable show, it's huge for Syfy and more than enough to keep Defiance afloat for now.  If the show sinks down to the 0.5 range where most of the network's other shows have been hovering of late, that might be a concern because of its high production costs.  But then Defiance also has online game as part of its strategy which has logged more than six million hours of gameplay since it launched at the beginning of this month.  That may be generating revenue as well to help offset the production costs of the TV show.  In any case, Defiance is definitely safe for now, and if it holds up its ratings numbers for the next couple of weeks I wouldn't be surprised if Syfy awarded it with an early renewal.

And cable shows continue to rule elsewhere as well as HBO's Game of Thrones posted a 2.4 score in  the 18-49 demo with 4.7 million total viewers this last Sunday.  That rating topped the night among cable shows and bested all of the genre shows on television the prior week including the broadcast network offerings.  And over on A&E, Bates Motel improved its numbers slightly on Monday as it pulled a 1.1 rating with 2.7 million total viewers.

On the broadcast channels, FOX's The Following sunk to a 2.1 rating in the 18-49 demo with 6.4 million total viewers on Monday night.  It has continued to lose ground to NBC's The Voice, but its network is not too concerned because they have already renewed the show for a second season.  NBC's Revolution was preempted for coverage of the bombings in Boston which will shift all of that show's episodes by one week with the finale now scheduled to air on June 3rd.  And on Sunday, Once Upon A Time aired a clips/recap episode which pulled a 1.3 rating with 5.2 million total viewers.

Keep an eye on the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for the early numbers for the rest of this week's shows, and you can see the Cancellation Alert status of all the shows currently airing plus the final results from prior seasons at my Cancellation Watch page.  And for questions on how the ratings work and my Cancellation Alert statuses, you can see the Cancellation Watch FAQ.

Ratings Source: TV by the Numbers

Nielsen TV Ratings: ©2013 The Nielsen Company. All Rights Reserved.



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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Final Predictions on Whether Revolution, Beauty and the Beast, Once Upon A Time, Grimm, and Other Genre Shows Will Get Cancelled


The upfronts are about a month away which is when the broadcast networks announce their schedules for the coming season.  And it is by that point that we will have the final word on which of this season's shows will get cancelled and which ones will be coming back.  Currently there are nine shows on the broadcast and cable networks that still have a pending status, so I'll take this opportunity to cast my final predictions.  And the networks could make announcements on the cancellation/renewal of any or all of these shows at any point over the next four weeks, so keep an eye on this site and the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for breaking announcements.

Already Renewed:  
American Horror Story (FX), Arrow (CW), Bates Motel (A&E), Being Human (Syfy), The Following (FOX), Game of Thrones (HBO), Haven (Syfy), Person of Interest (CBS), Supernatural (CW), Vampire Diaries (CW), The Walking Dead (AMC)

Already Cancelled or Ended: 
666 Park Ave (ABC), Cult (CW), Do No Harm (NBC), Fringe (FOX, Final Season), Last Resort (ABC), Zero Hour (ABC)

Status Still Pending (sorted by most likely to be cancelled):

Cancellation Alert Levels: Low, Moderate, Medium, Elevated, High

Touch  (FOX): You can basically count this one gone and I've been saying that since FOX ill-advisedly renewed it last season. It had a strong start way back when it kicked off its first season, but it's numbers went steadily down to the point that they should have axed it last year.  But they didn't and instead greenlighted a second season then bumped the premiere several times and finally cast it to low viewership Friday nights directly against another genre show (Grimm) which is one of the few to actually pull decent ratings on that night of late.  FOX didn't give this one much of a chance for its sophomore year and and series star Kiefer Sutherland has already been exploring other opportunites.  Current Cancellation Alert: High  Final Verdict: Almost no chance of a renewal

Beauty and the Beast (CW)  By all rights, this one should be cancelled because it has pulled exceptionally poor ratings and it typically loses 50% or more of its Vampire Diaries lead-in audience.  But then it does air on the fifth place network, and earlier in the year the president for The CW was talking about how he believes "the show has a very long run in front of it".  Perhaps we understand why this is the fifth place network and actually currently gets beat out regularly by several of the basic cable channels (some running repeats).  Current Cancellation Alert: Medium  Final Verdict: If they renew it, then it's the sign of a dying network grasping at straws.

The Neighbors (ABC): This alien-in-the-suburbs sitcom has never pulled particularly high ratings throughout its first season and it has typically been the lowest rated half-hour of ABC's Wednesday night two hour comedy block.  But then sitcoms aren't expected to pull huge returns because they are cheaper to produce (though every network is looking for a sitcom ratings juggernaut like The Big Bang Theory).  The Neighbors did drop notably as the season ended, though, and that always a bad sign.  But perhaps ABC will give it a chance to see if it will grow its numbers next season (the afore mentioned Big Bang Theory didn't have huge numbers in its first season either).  Current Cancellation Alert: Medium  Final Verdict: Call it a toss up.

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Nikita (CW):  Another CW show that seems like it should get the axe based on its numbers, but this one has been buoyed thus far by its international appeal where it is a big hit.  It's possible they could renew this one as a Summer show just to pad out its syndication package for the foreign market.  Or they could just decide to keep it on Fridays because they don't really have much else better to put there for now.  Current Cancellation Alert: Moderate  Final Verdict:  One more season doesn't look impossible at this point.

Once Upon A Time (ABC):  As recently as the beginning of the season, this one was still considered a major hit for ABC.  But then it has had a rough second half of the season, sinking to its lowest numbers yet.  The network hasn't given up on it, though, because they are currently working on a potential spin-off with the Mad Hatter character.  It's likely that they will keep Once Upon A Time around for another season, but they will need to do some re-tooling to bring its audience back lest this one and its spin-off lose there chances for a happily ever after.  Current Cancellation Alert: Moderate  Final Verdict: A decent chance of renewal, but it needs to reconnect with its audience.

Defiance (Syfy):  This one just debuted last night and the returns have not come in yet.  There's been some pretty positive buzz around it though, so that's a good sign.  But then Syfy has not had much success with scripted shows of late and has developed a reputation for giving up pretty quickly when they don't like the numbers (Caprica, Stargate: Universe, Alphas, etc.)  I give it better than average odds at this point, but check back for an update once the debut numbers are available.  Prognosis: Looks relatively positive early on.

Hannibal (NBC):  This series had the odds stacked against it with its brutal Thursday 10 PM EST timeslot and its late season start.  But then it pulled halfway decent numbers (for that timeslot and for NBC) with its debut and improved on those with its second episode.  I understand that they are making good use of social media to get the word out about this one, and that seems to be working so far.  At this point, its prospects are much brighter than were those for either Do No Harm or last year's Awake, both of which succumbed to this timeslot on NBC.  Current Cancellation Alert: Moderate  Final Verdict:  It's still early to tell, but verdict isn't too grim at this point.

Revolution (NBC):  I can't see NBC giving up on this one after it was their crown jewel among scripted shows for the first half of the season.  But then its numbers have sunk pretty low since its return from its fourth month hiatus.  I still think they will keep it around (it's not like they have any other scripted shows lighting up the Nielsens these days), but they will need to retool this one next season if they want it to get back anywhere near its early season numbers.  Current Cancellation Alert: Low  Final Verdict:  Seems certain for renewal, but how much steam will it have going into next season?

Grimm (NBC):  This one is a sure thing.  You can go ahead and rubberstamp it for a third (and likely fourth) season.  It has performed consistently well on low viewership Friday giving NBC a good hold on that night (and it has actually outperformed some of that network's shows on the higher viewership Sunday through Thursday nights).  They should actually consider pairing this one up with Hannibal next season, giving them a pretty strong horror/supernatural block on Fridays.  Current Cancellation Alert: Low  Final Verdict: Sure thing for renewal.




Why Were They Cancelled? 
The Plight of Science Fiction and Fantasy Television in the Face of the Unforgiving Nielsens and Networks

Ever wondered why your favorite science fiction and/or fantasy show disappeared from the television schedule, never to deliver anymore new episodes? The reason why, most likely, is that it was cancelled because its ratings were low. And this book looks at those many cancelled sci fi/fantasy shows as well as the Neilsen ratings and television networks that dictate their fates. Available now for only $2.99 on Kindle from Amazon.com.

New in Comics: Keith Giffen Brings Back He-Man and the Masters of the Univers

A few choice selections from the comics due out April 17th (Note that the release dates are tentative on some of these titles):

He Man And The Masters Of The Universe #1
DC

Description: First exciting issue of the new, ongoing adventures of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe!

While the Masters of the Universe mourn the loss of a fallen friend, Hordak infiltrates Eternia!

Featuring the return of She-Ra! Now known as Despara, the most lethal weapon in Hordak's army, she returns to Eternia as He-Man's newest enemy!

By: Keith Giffen, Pop Mhan, Ed Benes


House of Gold & Bones #1
Dark Horse

Description: Trapped in an alternate reality, the Human must make his way to the House of Gold & Bones as he is chased by a crazed mob, and taunted by mysterious ally, Allen. What the Human discovers on his journey will be his salvation . . . or his destruction

Stone Sour and Slipknot's Corey Taylor turns nightmare to reality!

* Inspired by the Stone Sour album House of Gold & Bones.

* Cover art by Jason Shawn Alexander.

By: Corey Taylor, Richard Clark, Dan Jackson, Jason Shawn Alexander


Jirni #1 (of 5)
Aspen Mlt Inc

Description: Take an incredible JIRNI with Aspen's newest '10 for 10" series debut! Discover a whole new world of adventure! Trekking through a violent and dangerous frontier of savage barbarians, devious thieves, and wild creatures, a warrior-princess named Ara searches for her mother, who was stolen away from her kingdom by a mysterious sorcerer with the help of his powerful D'jinn. What great and terrible secrets await her in the distant horizon? Prepare to experience an epic tale of fantasy and wonder without boundaries. This is Ara's quest. This is Ara's destiny. This is Ara's - JIRNI. After years of preparation, creator JT Krul is ready to take you on a JIRNI unlike any other! Accompanied by the incredible talents of artist Paolo Pantalena and colorist Brett Smith, prepare yourself for the ride of a lifetime and the premiere of 2013's newest hit series!

By: J. T. Krul, Paolo Pantalena


Star Wars: Darth Vader and the Ninth Assassin #1
Dark Horse

Description: Eight assassins hired to murder Darth Vader-eight assassins dead. Now the man who enlisted them seeks a ninth assassin. The price? A cost higher than all the credits in his bottomless coffers. But when it comes to avenging his son, no sacrifice is too great to acquire the one man who can kill the Dark Lord of the Sith . . .

The Hunt for Darth Vader is on!

* All-new series starring Darth Vader!

* Tim Siedell (@badbanana) has one of Time's 140 Best Twitter Feeds!

By: Tim Siedell, Stephen Thompson, Mark Irwin, Michael Atiyeh, Ariel Olivetti


Neozoic Traders Gambit #1 (of 4)
Red 5 Comics

Description: The long-awaited return to the world where dinosaurs and humans live side-by-side! While the Predator Defense League oversees the rebuilding of the city, Lilli and Petra get considerably more than babysitting duty trying to protect a caravan from the giant lizards in the wild.

By: Paul Ens, J. Korim

More of This Week's Comics at This Link 

Monday, April 15, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Hannibal Improves Its Numbers from its Debut


NBC's serial killer/horror series Hannibal aired its second episode this last Thursday and succeeded in doing something rarely seen with television shows these days: it increased its ratings after its debut (the preliminaries showed it steady, but the finals went up).  Most shows usually hit their high point with there season/series debut and then begin to trend downward after that (some slightly, others drastically).  But Hannibal, based on the notorious character created by Thomas Harris who has appeared in four novels and four big screen films, bucked that trend and actually improved its ratings with its second episode.  It wasn't a major jump, going from a 1.6 rating in the 18-49 demographic to a 1.7, but it's an accomplishment for a show just to hold on to its debut ratings numbers, let alone improve them.  If it manages to stay in this range, then the show has a decent chance of winning a second season renewal.  And from what I understand, this one is playing the social media angle hard, trying to drum up interest that way.  It's still early to tell, and I'm not going back off from the Moderate Cancellation Alert I have it at right now just yet.  But Hannibal just may succeed in beating the odds that were stacked against it going in and live into a second season.

Most of the rest of last week's Wednesday through Friday shows were in repeats or preempted, so it was a slow week otherwise.  Below are the full numbers for the week and you can read about the Sunday through Monday shows (as well as the cancellation of Cult and renewals of Bates Motel and Being Human) in my mid-week column.  Also, tonight is the debut of Defiance on Syfy which bows at 9 PM EST.  Keep an eye on the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for the early returns from that one and the other Sunday thru Monday shows from this week.  You can see the Cancellation Alert status of all the shows currently airing plus the final results from prior seasons at my Cancellation Watch page.  And for questions on how the ratings work and my Cancellation Alert statuses, you can see the Cancellation Watch FAQ.

Ratings Results for the Week of April 7:
Once Upon A Time (R) (ABC Sun 8 PM) Rating: 0.6 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Low
Game of Thrones (HBO Sun 9 PM) Rating: 2.3 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
The Following (FOX Mon 9 PM) Rating: 2.2 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Being Human (Syfy Mon 9 PM) Rating: 0.5 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Low
Bates Motel (A&E Mon 10 PM) Rating: 1.0 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Low
Revolution (NBC Mon 10 PM) Rating: 2.2 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Low
Arrow (R) (CW Wed 8 PM) Rating: 0.4 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Supernatural (R) (CW Wed 9 PM) Rating: 0.4 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Vampire Diaries (R) (CW Thu 8 PM) Rating: 0.3 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Person of Interest (R) (CBS Thu 9 PM) Rating: 1.8 | Trend: Down | Cancellation Alert: Renewed
Beauty and the Beast (R) (CW Thu 9 PM) Rating: 0.3 | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Medium
Hannibal (NBC Thu 10 PM) Rating: 1.7 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Moderate
Nikita (CW Fri 8 PM) Rating: 0.4 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Moderate
Cult (CW Tue 9 PM) Rating: Pulled | Trend: Steady | Cancellation Alert: Cancelled
Touch (FOX Fri 9 PM) Rating: Preempted | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: High
Grimm (R) (NBC Fri 9 PM) Rating: 0.7 | Trend: Up | Cancellation Alert: Low

Ratings Source: TV by the Numbers

Nielsen TV Ratings: ©2013 The Nielsen Company. All Rights Reserved.



Why Were They Cancelled? 
The Plight of Science Fiction and Fantasy Television in the Face of the Unforgiving Nielsens and Networks

Ever wondered why your favorite science fiction and/or fantasy show disappeared from the television schedule, never to deliver anymore new episodes? The reason why, most likely, is that it was cancelled because its ratings were low. And this book looks at those many cancelled sci fi/fantasy shows as well as the Neilsen ratings and television networks that dictate their fates. Available now for only $2.99 on Kindle from Amazon.com.